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Intelsat-7 Lost In Space

freitasm writes "The Intelsat-7 was reported lost today. The satellite covered the continental U.S., Alaska, Hawaii, Canada, Central America, and parts of South America. It was used to provide digital programming in the Cable Zone, direct-to-user programming, and Internet and data applications to North/Central/South America. The company is already working on the launch of Intelsat-8, scheduled for 17 December."

39 of 214 comments (clear)

  1. Off by one error, again? by Project2501a · · Score: 5, Funny

    Fortran 3 :)
    Losing satelites in space, ever since 1964 :)

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  2. Corporate Espionage? by HFShadow · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "According to the agreement, the total loss of the IA-7 satellite would give the purchasers the right not to consummate the acquisition of Intelsat"

    Maybe they decided they didn't want the company after all, and it was cheaper to take out a satellite somehow then to break the contract? :)

    1. Re:Corporate Espionage? by WateryGrave · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This was my first thought as well. Given that they just *happen* to have a replacement going up in 2 weeks and then to experience an "anomaly" to stop the deal from consumating seems a bit suspicious. If either of these companies has stockholders, we may hear more in the future.

    2. Re:Corporate Espionage? by Detritus · · Score: 5, Informative

      When something like this happens, they often see anomalous telemetry readings before the complete failure of the spacecraft. For example, main power bus current goes from 10A to 200A and main power bus voltage starts going down, down, down. The engineering telemetry link on a geosynchronous spacecraft is usually monitored 24/7 by the spacecraft's control center.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
  3. Direct-to-user-programming? by Advocadus+Diaboli · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Does that mean the satellite is programming user brains with commercials? :-)

    Or do I have a wrong translation of "programming"? Sorry, I'm not a native speaker, but the use of "programming" instead of "broadcasting" looks a bit strange to me.

    1. Re:Direct-to-user-programming? by oexeo · · Score: 5, Funny
      Does that mean the satellite is programming user brains with commercials? :-)

      Or do I have a wrong translation of "programming"? Sorry, I'm not a native speaker, but the use of "programming" instead of "broadcasting" looks a bit strange to me.

      Whenever something translates into complete moronic gibberish, yes, the chances are you translated it wrong, on no, wait, this is /., you probably translated it perfectly.

  4. Newspeak by oexeo · · Score: 5, Informative
    Intelsat Americas-7 satellite experienced a sudden and unexpected electrical distribution anomaly

    Newspeak for power failure?

    1. Re:Newspeak by erlando · · Score: 3, Informative
      More like "short circuit"..

      Something went POOF

      --
      Remember, there are no stupid questions. But there are a lot of inquisitive idiots.
    2. Re:Newspeak by CarbonJackson · · Score: 5, Funny

      Naw, newspeak for "hit by a Russian sattelite based laser." More importantly, who cares? As long as it doesn't affect my porn downloads.

      --

      MikeAtIF*ckStuffedAnimalsDotCom
  5. What does this mean? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    From the post, "It was used to provide digital programming in the Cable Zone, direct-to-user programming, and Internet and data applications to North/Central/South America." So what's the actual effect of this? Is their service loss? Or is there enough redundancy to cover?

    1. Re:What does this mean? by Paster+Of+Muppets · · Score: 5, Informative
      From the article:

      Intelsat has made alternative capacity available to most of its IA-7 customers, many of whom have already had their services restored.

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      Due to lack of disk space this user has been discontinued
    2. Re:What does this mean? by vern · · Score: 5, Informative

      For some locations, i.e. Alaska, there are no other Ku band satellites in range. Ku is the band that the satellite internet providers use. For those remote folks who rely on satellite to get access, their only alternative may now be dial-up.

      See StarBand's note on the right-hand side of their page: "we are working to provide our customers with temporary dial-up service."

  6. Conspiracy Theory by ragnarok · · Score: 4, Funny

    Remember how the US Government was complaining about not being able to get enough satelite bandwidth over war zones? Sounds like they just fixed that problem!

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    Search first, ask questions later.
  7. Lost Satellite? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Have they tried looking down the back of the sofa?

  8. In Other News ... by TheUncleBob · · Score: 5, Funny

    Earlier today, the Pentagon announced the first succesful test of their new EMP 'starwars' defence shield.

  9. Obviously..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    It's been taken out by a bathtub sized slab of copper........

    probably

  10. E.T. Sitcoms and Dramas by sl4shd0rk · · Score: 4, Funny

    That would explain the weird programming I've been recieving. I thought these were just Star Trek re-runs I never saw.

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  11. It was Santa :D by Killjoy_NL · · Score: 4, Funny

    It was Santa, he is doing some training runs for coming december 25th/etc and accidentally ran over the satellite.

    Poor Rudolph hit his nose on it, it will be red for about a month.

    --
    This is the sig that says NI (again)
    1. Re:It was Santa :D by oexeo · · Score: 5, Funny

      > does Santa qualify as a terrorist?

      He has a long white beard, so yes

  12. More info by wikinerd · · Score: 4, Informative

    You can read more info about this here

  13. What do you do? by FireFury03 · · Score: 5, Interesting


    What exactly do you do if you're running satellite services and the satellite dies? As far as I can see, you either have to get a replacement up pretty damned quickly or you have to go reposition everyone's dishes so you can use another sat. Or are there already other satellites close enough to be able to use without moving dishes?

    (How close do sats have to be if you want to avoid moving dishes?)

    I imagine losing a satellite would be quite a big deal for satellite TV companies, etc who have all their services routed through a single satellite - talk about all your eggs in one basket.

    1. Re:What do you do? by bakkajin · · Score: 5, Informative

      I'm sure that it won't be a huge deal. Our recievers have about 20 satellites programmed in them. I'm sure better/bigger stations or cable companies have more options.

      The station that I work at doesn't use IA7. Now if Intelsat 5/6 or Galaxy 4 dies, then we might have a problem.

    2. Re:What do you do? by maxume · · Score: 4, Informative

      People without motorised dishes are mostly on DirectTV or Dish Network. The dish networks setup that we have here is pointed at two or more satellites. I'm not sure about the mechanics of it, but I am pretty sure it recieves 3 or 4 satellites. They would probably still have some major issues if they lost a satellite, probably with ppv and stuff like that, but who knows. They would certainly be able to provide at least some limited amount of service.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    3. Re:What do you do? by Detritus · · Score: 4, Informative

      From past failures of geosynchronous communications satellites, there appear to be several classes of users. The people who pay the most, get guaranteed service and are quickly switched to a transponder on another satellite. The people who pay the least, lose their service and have to find another satellite, if any, that has unused capacity.

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      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
  14. Oh my god, no tv! by Realistic_Dragon · · Score: 3, Funny

    Fortunatly they will be rebroadcasting the entire 16 days worthwhile programming once the new satellite is online. The transmission is expected to take approximatly 131 seconds.

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    Beep beep.
  15. First Strike by CmdrGravy · · Score: 5, Funny

    Damn, satellites being taken out, earthquakes in Japan and dolphins committing mass suicide in Australia.

    The facts all point to this being either the second coming or an alien invasion. I cannot believe no one is doing anything about this, the psychic viewing community have been warning about exactly this kind of disaster for weeks now and the Church has known about it for even longer. Why are they covering this up ?

    Wait, I am picking up their carrier waves on the plate in my head, they say they will ban TV, Gays and Fornication but offer us all the opportunity of at least 4 fully accredited abductions per family and provide live reconstructions of the of the Raputure. They have big eyes, funny shaped heads but big hands and huge crosses and we should welcome them.

  16. the reward ! by phreakv6 · · Score: 3, Funny

    "The Intelsat-7 was reported lost today."

    finders keepers

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    fifteen jugglers, five believers
  17. Yet more spacejunk floating about by Viol8 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Great , another few tons of space junk floating about in the geostationary orbit. Whats worse is that if they've completely lost contact with the satellite then they won't even be able to shove it into a parking orbit like they do with old decommisioned ones. It'll just drift about in the main orbital zone and could possibly one day collide with a working satellite. AT the very least it means that spot in the orbit is out of bounds for other satellites now.

    1. Re:Yet more spacejunk floating about by Detritus · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's big enough that the Air Force can track it on radar and keep it in their catalog of orbiting space junk. If there is a danger of a collision, they can send a warning to the owner of the other satellite so they can take evasive action.

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      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    2. Re:Yet more spacejunk floating about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Uhm ... nope.
      Geostationary satellites perform active stationkeeping ... both north/south and east/west. They do station keeping burns about every 2-4 weeks on average to keep it within their 0.5 degree longitudinal slot.

      Solar raditation pressure, 3rd body perturbations (mostly the moon) and the irregular shape of the earth all perturb the orbit. So if they've lost everything on this bird ... not just the payload ... then it will drift through the belt and eventually settle about one of 2 stable points. The inclination will also increase to about 15 degrees.

  18. Is this related to Starband's outage? by antdude · · Score: 4, Informative

    This ComputerWeekly's article says there was a failure of a communications satellite over the weekend that knocked out US broadband services supplied by StarBand Communications. The total loss of Intelsat's Americas-7 satelllite forced StarBand to move customers to a different satellite. StarBand did not say how many subscribers were affected, but is attempting to provide them with a temporary dial-up service.

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    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
    1. Re:Is this related to Starband's outage? by vern · · Score: 4, Informative
      Is this related to Starband's outage?
      Most definitely. Starband can point some customers to their other satelite (was GE4, might be AMC4 now) but their remote customers in Alaska don't have any other options.
  19. Blame Canada by mordors9 · · Score: 3, Funny

    The government will do anything to keep Fox News from their air waves.

  20. "Lost" ? by Exaton · · Score: 4, Interesting

    OK, so I only glanced at TFA, and I realise that Intelsat has to replace the lost functionality as quickly as they can... But I can't help being slightly suspicious about the timing with the launch of Intelsat-8...

    I mean, do satellite-launching companies have any obligations to bring an old satellite down cleanly and safely to avoid the accumulation of space junk ? If so, how much would such an operation cost ?

    Undoubtedly looks like I'm speaking from under a tin foil hat here, but I wonder how long in advance, before the "loss", the launch of Intelsat-8 had been planned for...

    1. Re:"Lost" ? by Coz · · Score: 5, Informative

      No company voluntarily "loses" a multi-million dollar functional asset. If it's still got functional transponders, they'll keep using it.

      As for your other point - when possible, close to end-of-life, they try to move geosync birds to a super-synchronous (above the geosync plane) orbit, which will eventually cause them to migrate to nodal points safely out of the way of the remaining commercial satellites. This is often accomplished by a thruster burn that exhausts the remaining fuel in the tanks (preventing later tank explosions after thermal control is lost). If the satellite fails before planned end-of-life (usually determined by available fuel or power), it will end up in a figure-8 orbit roughly centered on the equator, and will slowly drift East or West depending on whether it was low or high, causing collision-avoidance issues for the rest of the geostationary com birds out there.

      There's a lot of reference material out there - give it a read.

      --
      I love vegetarians - some of my favorite foods are vegetarians.
    2. Re:"Lost" ? by DougWebb · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I did an internship with GE Astrospace about 14 years ago, and the project I worked on was developing an accurate fuel gauge for satellites.

      They store fuel in spherical tanks which are pressurized with helium (to push the fuel against the sides), and which have ribs inside which guide the fuel towards the nozzle. You can't put any kind of mechanical device in there to measure how much fuel is left, and they definitely avoid having anything electronic in there.

      As a result, their only way of estimating how much fuel is remaining is to keep careful records of how long each jet burns during station-keeping, and an estimate of how much fuel is used for each burn. This estimate becomes less and less accurate over the life of the satellite, due to the measurement errors adding up and degredation in the jet performance.

      I was told that by the 'end' of a satellite's lifetime, they can still have enough fuel to last another year. Or they may be out of fuel. Either way, the company has to get the replacement up there before the old satellite runs out, which is an expensive and lengthy process. Most satellites get replaced when they still have 1-2 years of life left in them, which is a huge waste of resources. (Many millions of dollars.)

      Anyway, by the end of my internship, we were able to demonstrate a method of directly measuring the amount of fuel in the tanks at any point during the satellite's lifetime, with a much lower error than the record keeping approach. This would allow the satellite to be left in service much closer to it's true end of life. I don't know if the process ever got out of the experimental stage though; not long after I left, GE Astrospace was sold off to another company, and I'm pretty sure the engineering department got gutted.

  21. Channels that were temporarily lost... by doormat · · Score: 3, Informative

    Include Spice, Playboy, and TEN.

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    The Doormat

    If you're not outraged, then you're not paying attention.
  22. Ooops, my bad. by Gilmoure · · Score: 3, Funny

    Got a new laser pointer and was trying to piss off someone near Antares. Doh!

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    I drank what? -- Socrates
  23. Intelsat 7 broke.... by foxtrot · · Score: 4, Funny

    So they're gonna send up Intelsat 8?

    No respect. Did they even consider sending up AMDsat 1?

    -JDF